Roma idol De Rossi succeeds sacked Mourinho
(FILES) Italy's assistant coach Daniele De Rossi supervises warm up prior to the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Group C qualification football match between Italy and Northern Ireland at the Ennio-Tardini stadium in Parma on March 25, 2021. Daniele De Rossi began a new adventure at Roma on January 16, 2024, as the World Cup winner took over at his boyhood club following the sudden sacking of Jose Mourinho. The former Italy midfielder, who spent almost the entirety of his playing career at Roma, signed a deal "until 30 June 2024" with the Serie A club hours after Mourinho was dismissed. (Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP)
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Daniele De Rossi began a new adventure at Roma on Tuesday as
the World Cup winner took over at his boyhood club following the sudden sacking
of Jose Mourinho.
The former Italy midfielder, who spent almost the entirety
of his playing career at Roma, signed a deal "until 30 June 2024"
with the Serie A club hours after Mourinho was dismissed.
"I know no other way but dedication, daily sacrifices,
and giving everything I have in order to face the challenges that await us from
now until the end of the season," said De Rossi in a statement.
"The excitement of being able to sit on our bench is
indescribable. Everyone knows what Roma means to me."
A series of disappointing results which have the capital
club way off the pace in the Italian top flight this term did for Mourinho, who
left Roma's Trigoria training ground on Tuesday afternoon.
Mourinho was met by a scrum of reporters and a handful of
fans as he was driven out of the gates, saying "thank you for these two
years" to supporters who chanted his name.
De Rossi is an idol for Roma fans as a local boy done good
who played in some of the club's best teams of the last two decades, alongside
fellow icon Francesco Totti.
The 40-year-old, who grew up in a rough and ready beachside
suburb of Rome, played for Roma for nearly two decades, winning over fans who
saw in his passionate style of play one of their own on the pitch.
He won two Italian Cups and the 2007 Italian Super Cup,
before finishing his career at Boca Juniors in early 2020 after less than a
season in Argentina.
It is a huge job for someone with little pedigree as a coach
however, his only job at SPAL lasting just four months last season.
He was sacked in February last year in a season which
finished with SPAL being relegated to the third-tier Serie C.
Mourinho, who has been linked with a job in Saudi Arabia,
left Roma after an emotional two-and-a-half years in which he won Europa
Conference League in 2022, ending a 14-year trophy drought.
His contract was due to expire in June and although he had
repeatedly stated that he wanted to stay on, talks about an extension to his
deal never materialised.
Rumours of his departure grew more persistent after Roma
were knocked out of the Italian Cup by local rivals Lazio and Sunday's dismal
3-1 defeat at AC Milan which left them ninth in Serie A, five points adrift of the
Champions League positions.
The 60-year-old Portuguese was a shock appointment in 2021,
Roma's announcement of his arrival as the replacement to Paulo Fonseca coming
almost completely out of the blue.
He immediately became a huge fan favourite, with his image
popping up on walls around Rome as supporters dreamed of success under one of
football's greatest ever coaches.
And in his first season he guided Roma to the inaugural
Conference League, a triumph which brought Mourinho to tears on the pitch and
made him an almost God-like figure to one of Europe's most passionate and
success-starved fan bases.
He then came to within a penalty shootout of winning
back-to-back European finals, Roma falling at the last hurdle against Sevilla
in last season's Europa League.
That was a defeat which both enraged Mourinho and
supporters, who attacked referee Anthony Taylor with chairs at Budapest's
Ferenc Liszt airport in anger at what they considered bad decisions which cost
their team the trophy.
However the magic between Mourinho and the fans began to
wear off this term, with poor results and performances partly due to a raft of
injuries and summer transfers which haven't worked out.
Roma have failed to qualify for the money-spinning Champions
League under Mourinho's charge, a big problem for a club operating under
Financial Fair Play constraints which struggles to balance its books.


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